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OpenAI and Broadcom announce chip designed for LLM inference at scale

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Why This Matters

The collaboration between OpenAI and Broadcom to develop the Jalapeño chip marks a significant advancement in large language model inference, offering improved performance and efficiency tailored for data center deployment. This development underscores the industry's focus on specialized hardware to meet the growing demands of AI workloads, potentially transforming how large-scale models are powered and scaled. For consumers and the tech industry, this signals a move toward more efficient, powerful AI infrastructure that can support increasingly sophisticated applications.

Key Takeaways

OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT and Codex and the models those tools utilize, and Broadcom, an established silicon supplier, have announced a new chip called Jalapeño, designed specifically for large language model inference in data centers.

The chip is intended to be deployed at large data centers, both companies claim this is just the first generation in a long-term project that will see chips refined over time.

Broadcom says that this ASIC (Application-Specific Integrated Circuit) was designed from scratch for LLM inference, based on “detailed insights” from the company’s conversations with researchers at OpenAI, and that the chip’s development was informed by OpenAI’s own roadmap for future models and products. The design and production of the chip took nine months.

The promise is that this chip is more specialized for the current needs of LLMs than those that inference systems currently run on in existing data centers.

OpenAI claims that “early testing shows that Jalapeño will deliver performance per watt substantially better than current state-of-the-art,” but notes that it is not done measuring performance, and that a “detailed technical report will be presented in the coming months.”